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COVID and diabetes link prompts warning for 'particular vigilance' for a period after infection

In the study published in PLOS Medicine by researchers at King's College London, the experts said "particular vigilance" is needed in the period after catching coronavirus.

Image: There were 81% more cases of diabetes diagnosed in the first four weeks after COVID
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People with COVID are at increased risk of developing diabetes or cardiovascular diseases in the weeks following infection, according to a new study.

Scientists said the chances of diabetes was higher in the three months after a COVID infection - but returned to normal after 23 weeks.

The higher risk of cardiovascular diseases lasts for seven weeks, they added.

But they emphasised there was no evidence of an increase in the long-term risk for such health problems.

In the study published in PLOS Medicine by researchers at King's College London, the experts said "particular vigilance" among both patients and doctors is needed in the period after catching COVID.

Professor Ajay Shah, British Heart Foundation chair of cardiology and Executive Dean of the Faculty of Life Sciences & Medicine, said the findings "will be extremely valuable to doctors managing the millions of people who have had COVID".

"It is clear that particular vigilance is required for at least the first three months after COVID-19," he added.

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Medical records from more than 428,000 COVID patients were used for the research.

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There were 81% more cases of diabetes diagnosed in the first four weeks after COVID - the risk remained elevated by 27% for up to 12 weeks.

Coronavirus was also linked with a six-fold increase in the diagnosis of cardiovascular conditions - but the risk declined five weeks after infection and returned to "baseline levels or lower" within 12 weeks to one year.